Panama slams 'unfair' OECD accusations against it

Panama has hit back at accusations that it is a secretive offshore hub, sending a letter to the head of the OECD saying such allegations were "unfair and discriminatory."

The country's deputy foreign minister, Luis Miguel Hincapie, said in the harsh letter addressed to the OECD's Angel Gurria that, in the wake of the so-called Panama Papers revelations, he had made "allegations and insinuations whose falsity is easily demonstrated."

The letter, obtained by AFP, said that Panama rejects the "regrettable" characterization made by Gurria in a statement on Monday, in which he said: "The 'Panama Papers' revelations have shone the light on Panama’s culture and practice of secrecy. Panama is the last major holdout that continues to allow funds to be hidden offshore from tax and law enforcement authorities.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has led the charge to try to make Panama's financial transactions more transparent. The Central American country has introduced recent reforms, but the OECD says it still falls short on the issue of automatic financial information exchange.

Shockwaves from the Panama Papers investigation

Sabrina BLANCHARD, Alain BOMMENEL, AFP

Hincapie wrote that Panama's company laws "are not fundamentally different from any other relevant financial jurisdiction" and noted that half of offshore companies are registered in the British Virgin Islands -- "a jurisdiction that operates under British legislation."

He also stressed that all of the 10 banks named in the Panama Papers as doing business with the law firm hit by the hack were based in Europe, not Panama.

And he noted, too, that the US state of Delaware allowed great anonymity for company owners.

"The tactic to ignore other jurisdictions and focus solely on Panama is unfair and discriminatory," he wrote.

- Efforts to 'tarnish' Panama -

Hincapie said the reports on the Panama Papers were being used to "distort the facts and tarnish the reputation of the country."

Panama is mounting a fierce defense of its laws and practices in an effort to protect its vital financial services sector.

A journalist takes pictures of the facade of the building where the Mossack Fonseca law firm offices are in Panama City, on April 5, 2016

Rodrigo Arangua, AFP

Earlier Tuesday, it warned it could retaliate against France if Paris went ahead with a declaration that it would put Panama back on its blacklist of tax havens.

On Wednesday, the foreign ministry will also call a meeting of foreign diplomats in the country to press its argument that it is being unfairly treated in the wake of the hack on the law firm Mossack Fonseca.

At the same time, the government has reiterated that it stood ready to cooperate with any judicial probe resulting from the leaked documents, something Hincapie echoed in his letter.